You’ve got great taste.
Sign in to follow your favorite artists, save events, & more.
Sign In
Bandsintown
get app
Sign Up
Log In
Sign Up
Log In

Industry
ArtistsEvent Pros
HelpPrivacyTerms
Ex Everything Tickets, Tour Dates and Concerts

Ex Everything

Julia Davis Park
700 S Capitol Blvd
Boise, ID 83702

Mar 26, 2025

4:20 PM MDT
I Was There
Leave a Review
Ex Everything Tickets, Tour Dates and Concerts

Treefort Music Fest 2025 Lineup

Bookmark your favorites to build your schedule and get reminders
View All
Wed,
Mar 26
Thu,
Mar 27
Fri,
Mar 28
Sat,
Mar 29
Sun,
Mar 30

About Treefort Music Fest 2025

Treefort Music Fest is a five-day, multi-venue, multi-genre music festival that takes place in the heart of Boise, ID. Happening March 26-30, 2025. Conceived as an exte...
read more
Follow Festival

Share Event

Ex Everything Biography

Bay Area post-hardcore quartet and recent Neurot Recordings signing Ex Everything have hope for the future. The caveat? “Hope without action is meaningless”. For this band, action comes in the form of creation, and creation comes in the form of frenetic, raw music, full of rage but driving for change in the system and in our lives. Their debut album, Slow Change Will Pull Us Apart arrives 10th November via Neurot Recordings.

The Bay Area quartet boasts current and former members of Kowloon Walled City, Early Graves, Mercy Ties, Blowupnihilist, Less Art and others, but they will be first to admit that Ex-Everything is very much its own thing. Jon Howell says, “It addresses the part of us that wants to write fast, chaotic, knotty, messy, pissed off music.”

The music is a fusion of Dischord-influenced math rock and noisecore, a nuanced rage that refuses to accommodate the passive listener. The band’s true skill, though, lies in how their instruments interlock, the structuring of movements that grow songs from rotted dirges to triumphant war cries, rhythmic tension building until a riff explodes it into something unexpected and completely satisfying.

Whilst the album is a depiction of people losing connection with each other, the shows that the band put on see their audiences coming together in catharsis and fighting back against this separation.

“We want these songs to move people the way they move us,” Howell says. “Because this band is nothing without that.”
Read More
Post Hardcore
Hardcore Punk
Noise-rock
Follow artist